
I landed in Puerto Vallarta with one intention: to slow down.
Not the kind of slow that comes from exhaustion or burnout. But the deliberate, soul-feeding kind of slow that lets you actually taste your morning coffee instead of gulping it down. The kind where you watch the sunrise without checking your phone.
This was my week of slow living in PV. And honestly? It changed everything about how I travel solo.
Finding My Rhythm in the Morning
My first morning, I woke up naturally. No alarm. Just the soft sound of birds and the gentle whoosh of the ceiling fan above my bed.
I made coffee in my kitchen and sat by the window watching the city wake up. The mountains were still wrapped in early morning mist. People below were starting their day at a pace that felt… human.

This became my ritual. Wake naturally. Coffee. Window time. No rushing to pack in activities before checkout time or maximize every minute of the day.
When you stay in a puerto vallarta condo for rent, you're not living in vacation mode. You're actually living. And that distinction matters more than I expected.
The Art of the Long Beach Day
Most travel guides will tell you to hit the beach early. Pack your schedule. See everything.
I did the opposite.
I'd leave around 11 AM. No rush. I'd grab fresh fruit from a local vendor on my walk down. Find a quiet spot. Sit. Read. Swim when I felt like it. Not because my itinerary said "beach time: 10-11:30 AM."
One afternoon at Conchas Chinas, I spent three hours doing absolutely nothing productive. I watched pelicans dive. I let the waves roll over my feet. I had zero agenda.
And it was perfect.

The locals get this. You'll see them at the beach with their families, setting up for hours. They're not rushing from activity to activity. They're just… being.
Afternoons Without Agendas
Here's what I learned: slow living doesn't mean doing nothing. It means doing less, better.
Some afternoons I'd wander through Zona Romántica. Not on a mission to see specific landmarks or check boxes. Just walking. Noticing details. The hand-painted tiles on a random building. A cat sleeping in a doorway. The smell of fresh tortillas.

I spent one entire afternoon at a small café working on my laptop. But mostly just people-watching between emails. No pressure to be anywhere else. If you're into that vibe, check out my guide to working remote spots around town.
Embracing Mexican Time
I'll be honest – the first couple days, I struggled with "Mexican time."
Everything starts later than planned. Your 2 PM appointment might kick off at 2:30. The restaurant that says it opens at 5? Maybe 5:15. Maybe 5:30.
At first, my Type-A brain wanted to fight this. But then I realized: this is exactly what I came here for. The slowness. The flexibility. The reminder that not everything needs to run on a tight schedule.
By day three, I was the one showing up fashionably late. And it felt great.
The Magic of Solo Sailing
One morning, I booked a small sailing trip. Just me and a handful of other travelers on a yacht, gliding across the bay.
There's something incredibly meditative about being on the water. The gentle sway. The sound of waves against the hull. No WiFi. No notifications. Just ocean and sky and the occasional seabird.
We dropped anchor near Los Arcos. Some people snorkeled. I just floated. Stared at the rock formations. Let my mind wander.
This is the kind of thing that's hard to do when you're rushing. When you've got six activities packed into one day. But when you build space into your schedule? Magic happens.
My Home Base for the Week
Having a proper space made all the difference.
I wasn't living out of a suitcase in a hotel room. I had a real kitchen where I made breakfast most mornings. A comfortable living room where I'd sit with evening tea. A bedroom that felt like mine.

The condo and apartment rentals puerto vallarta offers give you that "living here" feeling instead of the "passing through" energy of hotels. And for solo travelers trying to slow down? That matters.
I could leave my book on the coffee table. Keep fresh fruit in the fridge. Come and go as I pleased without feeling like I was wasting precious hotel time.
Evening Rituals and Sunset Walks
Most evenings, I'd walk down to the Malecón around sunset. Not rushing to get the perfect Instagram shot. Just walking. Watching the sky change colors.
Some nights I'd grab street tacos and eat them on a bench overlooking the bay. Other nights I'd find a quiet spot and just sit. Watch families stroll past. Listen to street musicians.
For more ideas on making the most of your solo evenings, I wrote about my perfect solo day in PV – including my favorite sunset spots.
What This Week Taught Me
Slow living in Puerto Vallarta isn't about doing nothing. It's about doing things with intention.
It's about having your morning coffee on your balcony instead of grabbing it to-go.
It's about spending three hours at the beach because you want to, not because your schedule allows exactly 90 minutes.
It's about embracing the fact that things start a little later here, and that's okay.
It's about giving yourself permission to not see everything, do everything, or maximize every single moment.
For My Fellow Solo Travelers
If you're considering a slow living week in PV, here's my advice:
Book accommodation with a kitchen. You'll want to make morning coffee without leaving your space.
Don't over-schedule. Three activities in a week is plenty.
Embrace local rhythms. Show up a bit late. Stay a bit longer than planned.
Find your spots. A favorite café. A preferred beach area. Return to them instead of always seeking something new.
Say yes to spontaneous conversations. Some of my best moments came from random chats with locals and other travelers.
Take yourself to dinner. It feels weird at first. Then it feels empowering.
And most importantly: let go of productivity. This isn't about maximizing your time. It's about savoring it.
My Final Morning
On my last morning, I woke up naturally again. Made my coffee. Sat by the window.
The same view. The same birds. The same gentle fan breeze.
But I felt different. Softer. More grounded. Like I'd actually rested instead of just taken a vacation.
That's the thing about slow living – it's not about where you go. It's about how you move through the world. And Puerto Vallarta, with its laid-back energy and naturally slower pace, makes it easy to find that rhythm.
Highly recommended for any solo traveler who's tired of rushing through life.
Want to follow along with more of my PV adventures? Check out my journey on Instagram where I share real moments from slow living in paradise.